UPDATE: Women, Development, and Global Capitalism (2/22/05; collection)
Due Date: February 22, 2005
Page #: 25-30
Contact: wdgc_at_hotmail.com
Women, Development, and Global Capitalism Reader
a service provided by www.english.upenn.edu |
FAQ changelog |
Due Date: February 22, 2005
Page #: 25-30
Contact: wdgc_at_hotmail.com
Women, Development, and Global Capitalism Reader
Due Date: February 22, 2005
Page #: 25-30
Contact: wdgc_at_hotmail.com
Women, Development, and Global Capitalism Reader
Europeans Writing the Mezzogiorno
University of Saint-Etienne (FRANCE)
Centre d'Etudes sur les Littératures Etrangères et Comparées
http://celec.univ-st-etienne.fr
Call for papers: Poetry and Politics. A Conference at the University of
Stirling, Scotland, 13-16 July 2006.
Poets and speakers to include Moniza Alvi, Eavan Boland, David Dabydeen,
Linton Kwesi Johnson, David Norbrook, Tom Paulin, Deryn Rees-Jones, Jo
Shapcott, and the Norton keynote speaker, Adrienne Rich.
Papers are invited which consider the theme of politics in relation to
poetry from classical antiquity to the contemporary. The following list
suggests some possible areas for development, but proposals in any area
relating to the conference theme of poetry and politics will be
welcome:
Call for papers: Poetry and Politics. A Conference at the University of
Stirling, Scotland, 13-16 July 2006.
Poets and speakers to include Moniza Alvi, Eavan Boland, David Dabydeen,
Linton Kwesi Johnson, David Norbrook, Tom Paulin, Deryn Rees-Jones, Jo
Shapcott, and the Norton keynote speaker, Adrienne Rich.
Papers are invited which consider the theme of politics in relation to
poetry from classical antiquity to the contemporary. The following list
suggests some possible areas for development, but proposals in any area
relating to the conference theme of poetry and politics will be
welcome:
Call for papers: Poetry and Politics. A Conference at the University of
Stirling, Scotland, 13-16 July 2006.
Poets and speakers to include Moniza Alvi, Eavan Boland, David Dabydeen,
Linton Kwesi Johnson, David Norbrook, Tom Paulin, Deryn Rees-Jones, Jo
Shapcott, and the Norton keynote speaker, Adrienne Rich.
Papers are invited which consider the theme of politics in relation to
poetry from classical antiquity to the contemporary. The following list
suggests some possible areas for development, but proposals in any area
relating to the conference theme of poetry and politics will be
welcome:
CALL FOR PAPERS
Special issue of the Journal of Popular British Cinema and Television : =
'Good television?'
In celebration of the formal addition of television to the Journal's =
remit, this special issue is devoted to television. Its focus is the =
question of 'good television'. In particular, we aim to address the =
following questions: What is good television? Why are appreciation and =
evaluation so rarely tackled within television studies? How might =
notions of critical judgement and value enhance television studies? What =
new approaches or perspectives might aid the critical assessment of =
television? What might television criticism within television studies =
UPDATE ON PREVIOUS POSTING:
New Entries, Extended Deadlines: see website below for details
This is the final call for papers for this Encyclopedia. Many entries
have been assigned, but many remain.
Contributors are needed to write short essays on topics related to
Native American Literature.
The essays are for a volume entitled The Encyclopedia of Native
American Literature, to be published by Facts on File, Inc. in late 2005
Information about the submissions as well as the complete list of
Remaining entries may be found at
http://www.kings.edu/jamcclin/facts.htm
UPDATE ON PREVIOUS POSTING:
New Entries, Extended Deadlines: see website below for details
This is the final call for papers for this Encyclopedia. Many entries
have been assigned, but many remain.
Contributors are needed to write short essays on topics related to
Native American Literature.
The essays are for a volume entitled The Encyclopedia of Native
American Literature, to be published by Facts on File, Inc. in late 2005
Information about the submissions as well as the complete list of
Remaining entries may be found at
http://www.kings.edu/jamcclin/facts.htm
Americana: The Journal of American Popular Culture (1900-present) seeks
submissions for the spring 2005 edition of the journal.
Please visit the journal at www.americanpopularculture.com/journal/index.htm
for submission guidelines on the "Call for Papers" link.
We are interested in analytical work in the fields of popular culture
studies, American studies, cultural studies, history, literature, film,
music, etc.
Deadline: 15 March 2005
Americana: The Journal of American Popular Culture (1900-present) seeks
submissions for the spring 2005 edition of the journal.
Please visit the journal at www.americanpopularculture.com/journal/index.htm
for submission guidelines on the "Call for Papers" link.
We are interested in analytical work in the fields of popular culture
studies, American studies, cultural studies, history, literature, film,
music, etc.
Deadline: 15 March 2005
Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose Poem
Abstracts of critical papers are invited for a collection of essays titled Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose
Poem.
Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose Poem
Abstracts of critical papers are invited for a collection of essays titled Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose
Poem.
Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose Poem
Abstracts of critical papers are invited for a collection of essays titled Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose
Poem.
Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose Poem
Abstracts of critical papers are invited for a collection of essays titled Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose
Poem.
Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose Poem
Abstracts of critical papers are invited for a collection of essays titled Out of Line: Women Writers of Color Writing the Prose
Poem.
The Brock Review is a blind peer-reviewed, scholarly, interdisciplinary
humanities journal that publishes annual themed issues. We at the Review are
currently accepting articles 4000-7000 words in length on the theme of
authenticity, widely conceived, in Western culture.
Possible topics may, but need not, include the following:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Call For Contributors
Cannibalism and Eating the "Other": Stories of Human Cuisine
Deadline for submissions has been extended to July 1, 2005.
This mainstream book will feature a collection of stories, both
fiction and non-fiction, that explores the dangerous transgressive
desire to eat human flesh and how various cultures interpret this
behavior.
What is it about this subject that, simultaneously, fascinates and repulses us?
Is cannibalism as universally condemned as is commonly assumed?
At what point does it become acceptable? In what contexts is
cannibalism a regular part of societies, past and present?
In conjunction with the theme of a future issue of the Shakespeare
Yearbook, "Shakespeare and the Reformation" (co-edited with Glyn
Parry), the journal will sponsor a special session at the upcoming
Annual Meeting of the MLA (Washington, D.C., December 27-30, 2004).
For both the MLA Session and the concomitant issue of the Shakespeare
Yearbook we welcome proposals for papers that explore the ways in
which Shakespeare's plays and poems engage with the spiritual and
temporal consequences of religious change in Elizabethan and Jacobean
England.
In conjunction with the theme of a future issue of the Shakespeare
Yearbook, "Shakespeare and the Reformation" (co-edited with Glyn
Parry), the journal will sponsor a special session at the upcoming
Annual Meeting of the MLA (Washington, D.C., December 27-30, 2004).
For both the MLA Session and the concomitant issue of the Shakespeare
Yearbook we welcome proposals for papers that explore the ways in
which Shakespeare's plays and poems engage with the spiritual and
temporal consequences of religious change in Elizabethan and Jacobean
England.
In conjunction with the theme of a future issue of the Shakespeare
Yearbook, "Shakespeare and the Reformation" (co-edited with Glyn
Parry), the journal will sponsor a special session at the upcoming
Annual Meeting of the MLA (Washington, D.C., December 27-30, 2004).
For both the MLA Session and the concomitant issue of the Shakespeare
Yearbook we welcome proposals for papers that explore the ways in
which Shakespeare's plays and poems engage with the spiritual and
temporal consequences of religious change in Elizabethan and Jacobean
England.
CFP: The popular market of Ethnic Toys (3/15/05; LASA March 15-18, 2006)
CFP: The popular market of Ethnic Toys (3/15/05; LASA March 15-18, 2006)
CFP: The popular market of Ethnic Toys (3/15/05; LASA March 15-18, 2006)
CFP: The popular market of Ethnic Toys (3/15/05; LASA March 15-18, 2006)
Call for Submissions
Selected articles to be published by Tamkang
University (Taiwan) in the book,
Reformation: The Teaching and Learning of English in
Electronic Environments
Call for Submissions
Selected articles to be published by Tamkang
University (Taiwan) in the book,
Reformation: The Teaching and Learning of English in
Electronic Environments
CALL-FOR-SUBMISSIONS: CrossRoads: A Southern Culture Annual, Volume
Three
Academic Exchange Quarterly
Writing Center Theory and Practice
Focus:
Academic Exchange Quarterly invites articles that explore issues of
theory, practice, and experience in writing center work, including
qualitative and empirical studies, discussions of pedagogy, and analyzes
of theory in three overlapping areas of inquiry.
Announcement & Call for submissions
The third issue of Participations: Journal of Audience and Reception
studies, a new journal which aims to provide an on-line, interdisciplinary
forum for the fields of audience and reception studies, has just come out.
Issue #3 (January, 2005) includes an editorial by Martin Barker, Desiree
Boughtwood's 'View to be thin: Interrogating media's relationship to eating
disorders through audience research' and Janet Staiger's 'Cabinets of
transgression: Collecting and arranging Hollywood images', and various
reviews.